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The Rolling Stones: Gimme Shelter (The Criterion Collection) (1970)

The Rolling Stones , Mick Jagger , Albert Maysles , David Maysles  |  R |  DVD
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (172 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Actors: The Rolling Stones, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards (II), Mick Taylor, Ike Turner
  • Directors: Albert Maysles, David Maysles, Charlotte Zwerin
  • Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, NTSC
  • Language: English (Dolby Digital 5.1), English (DTS 5.1)
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rated: R (Restricted)
  • Studio: Criterion
  • DVD Release Date: November 14, 2000
  • Run Time: 91 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (172 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00004YZFR
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #11,178 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
  • Learn more about "The Rolling Stones: Gimme Shelter (The Criterion Collection)" on IMDb

Special Features

  • Never-Before-Seen Footage From the 1969 Tour of the Rolling Stones Performing: "Oh Carol" and "Prodigal Son," plus backstage outtakes
  • Studio Mix Session "Little Queenie"
  • Altamont Stills Gallery, featuring the work of renowned photographers Bill Owens and Beth Sunflower
  • Excerpts From KSAN Radio's Altamont wrap-up, recorded December 7, 1969, with new introduction by then-DJ Stefan Ponek
  • Perspectives on Gimme Shelter; 44 page Booklet

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

To cite Gimme Shelter as the greatest rock documentary ever filmed is to damn it with faint praise. This 1970 release benefits from a horrifying serendipity in the timing of the shoot, which brought filmmakers Albert and David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin aboard as the Rolling Stones' tumultuous 1969 American tour neared its end. By following the band to the Altamont Speedway near San Francisco for a fatally mismanaged free concert, the Maysles and Zwerin wound up shooting what's been accurately dubbed rock's equivalent to the Zapruder film. The cameras caught the ominous undercurrents of violence palpable even before the first chords were strummed, and were still rolling when a concertgoer was stabbed to death by the Hell's Angels that served as the festival's pool cue-wielding security force.

By the time Gimme Shelter reached theater screens, Altamont was a fixed symbol for the death of the 1960s' spirit of optimism. The Maysles and Zwerin used that knowledge to shape their film: their chronicle begins in the editing room as they cut footage of the Stones' Madison Square Garden performance of "Jumpin' Jack Flash," and from there moves toward Altamont with a kind of dreadful grace. The songs become prophecies and laments for broken faith ("Wild Horses"), misplaced devotion ("Love in Vain"), and social collapse ("Street Fighting Man" and, of course, "Sympathy for the Devil"). Along the way, we glimpse the folly of the machinations behind the festival, the insularity of life on the concert trail, and the superstars' own shell-shocked loss of innocence.

Gimme Shelter looks into an abyss, partly self-created, from which the Rolling Stones would retreat--but unlike its subject, the filmmakers don't blink. --Sam Sutherland

Product Description

Called "the greatest rock film ever made," this landmark documentary follows the Rolling Stones on their notorious 1969 U.S. tour. When 300,000 members of the Love Generation collided with a few dozen Hell's Angels at San Francisco's Altamont Speedway, direct cinema pioneers David and Albert Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin immortalized on film the bloody slash that transformed a decade's dreams into disillusionment.

Customer Reviews

And it sounds great for a concert film recorded over thirty years ago. William M. Coughlin  |  48 reviewers made a similar statement
All of which culminates in the murder of a man right in front of the stage. Monkey Knuckle Asteroid  |  12 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
169 of 178 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Many people identify this as the greatest rock documentary ever made. I'm not sure it quite deserves that label (my vote would go for the older T.A.M.I. film, which has not yet been made available on DVD), but it is certainly the most interesting and frightening. Clearly it started off as a documentary of the Stones 1969 tour of the United States (which I believe was their first U.S. tour following the death of Brian Jones and his being replaced by Mick Taylor), but everything changed once Altamount happened. The death of Meredith Hunter at the hands of a member of the Hell's Angels, who had been employed to maintain security at the free concert the Stones gave in San Francisco, takes over the film, changing it from a documentary about the Stones on tour to a murder that took place at a Stones concert.

Until about half way through the documentary, the film is still primarily a documentary about the Stones. But once the cameras get to Altamount, the crew (which included as a cameraman young filmmaker George Lucas, though none of Lucas's film was included in the film due to a camera jam) catches the increasingly nasty atmosphere at the concert, with fans ascending the stage, fighting with the Hell's Angels, fighting with each other. The Grateful Dead, scheduled to play, declined to do so when they heard that Marty Balin of the Jefferson Airplane had been beaten up onstage by the Angel's (we see a brief shot of Jerry Garcia reacting incredulously to the news of the violence). By the end of the film, the viewer is left with a completely sickened feeling of the stupidity of everything he or she has just seen.

The violence completely obscures the fact that the Stones were at the time precisely what the announcer at the beginning of the film announces: the world's greatest rock and roll band. The performances, especially the earlier ones in the film, but also in the raw tape of songs like "Brown Sugar," are stunningly good, and it is especially apparent the new great guitar edge that Mick Taylor has brought to the band (Jones brought an across the board brilliance, and could add everything from slide guitar to upright piano to sitar to the mix, but was probably not quite Taylor's equal as a guitarist, and Taylor also brought a new reliability that contrasted with Jones's increasingly erratic behavior in his last year with the band). On the other hand, in the film the band largely disappears at time. Apart from Mick Jagger, the Stones are not always a palpable presence in their own film.

Historicism could be defined with focusing on the meaning of history rather than the objective telling of the events of history, or recounting the events for the sake of getting to their supposed underlying meaning. Sometimes it even involves projecting onto events meaning they would not otherwise have. Altamount is easily one of the most historicized moments in the history of both the sixties and rock and roll. Altamount is rarely treated as an isolated tragedy, but is more frequently regarded as a turning point in history, as if it were when the sixties came crashing to an end (something that I feel can more rightfully be ascribed to Kent State). I don't personally understand this need to project some story of apocalyptic closure to the decade. I'll merely state that I don't think that we should see anything more in Altamount than a tragedy that ought otherwise to have been prevented. It should it not be baptized as, nor was it, a defining moment in history.

One frustration I had with the film is that far too often the camera isn't focused on what was happening. There is a tendency for the film to merely drift at times. For instance, while the Flying Burrito Brothers, there are only a couple of incredibly brief shots of Gram Parsons's back. We can hear him singing the song, but we never see him actually singing it. Earlier, when performing the great Robert Johnson song "Love in Vain" (featuring some of the most powerfully poetic images ever written by an illiterate individual), the camera completely abandons a real-time observation of the performance, and lapses into a near fantasy-like viewing of Mick Jagger swirling about the stage in slow motion.

Anyone who loves this film, or merely enjoys it, should definitely read the Stanley Booth book THE TRUE ADVENTURES OF THE ROLLING STONES, which covers the precise same events as the film, but in much greater detail and with more insight both into the events surrounding Altamount and into the members of the band. It is one of the great classics of rock journalism.
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69 of 72 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Who's Fighting and What For? December 29, 2000
Format:DVD
"Gimme Shelter" is a lot of things. It's one of the greatest rock and roll films ever made. It's one of the greatest documentaries ever made. It's one of the best glimpses of a moment in time ever recorded, and it's a lasting crystallization of the point in time when the ideals and dreams of the 60's died and the hedonism and self-preservation of the 70's kicked in.

The Maysles Brothers and Charlotte Zwerin are famous for making documentaries about bible salesmen, old women in decaying mansions, and artists creating art. "Gimme Shelter" is doubly a shock because these somber and almost grim documentarians have been able to put across a rock and roll film that gives you a feeling of the power of music and the freshness of the spirit that the Stones brought to the table. In these moments, captured in 1969, you can see the point where the Stones make the step from rock stars to phenomena, and you see where the wall between artist and audience spawns from.

"Gimme Shelter" follows the Stones from touring and recording to their free concert at Altamont Speedway. The film breaks with documentary tradition and gives us a skewed timeline, interspersing concert footage and recording sessions with newscasts about the aftermath of Altamont, the Stones in the screening room watching footage of Altamont, and scenes of negotiating the final details before Altamont goes down. The Altamont concert itself is a marvel to behold, to witness what was captured by the gang of camera operators wandering through the crowd (including George Lucas). From drug dealers to painted hippies, Hells Angels to fathers and sons, from whimsy to terror. "Gimme Shelter" follows the show from it's chaotic first moments of parking wherever, ingesting whatever and acting however, to scenes of fast and random violence springing up around the stage as well as on stage. All of which culminates in the murder of a man right in front of the stage. All captured on beautiful, grainy 16mm with no tricks and no cheats.

The DVD is packed with great supplementary materials. A commentary from David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin, deleted scenes (including a great backstage scene of Ike, Tina and Mick hanging out), the full excerpts of the KSAN radio broadcast which is used occasionally in the film, trailers, photos and a small feature on the restoration of the print.

If you've seen "Gimme Shelter" before, you've noticed that the sound and image lack a lot. Criterion has completely restored the visuals to crystal clarity and given the audio tracks a much-needed shot in the arm. This film has never looked so good and never sounded so good.

The Stones have been the focus of several movies and a gang of media coverage, attempting to look beyond the gamefaces and see the real Stones. Very few have succeeded. "Gimme Shelter" is filled with moments where the Stones forget to pose, forget to put up a pretense and respond with real shock, real anger and real regret. This is the anti-"Woodstock." Besides all that, you'll rarely see the Stones in such top form and sounding and looking so good. If the shots of the band in action don't get you, then the shots of the crowd alone are worth the price of admission.

Rock films are seemingly a dime a dozen, and no one tends to care enough to make them real FILMS. "Gimme Shelter" is the antidote to the callous rock film tossaway, a film with as much brains as attitude, a film with a message as well as a soundtrack, and most of all, a film so much greater and so much deeper than the surface could ever lead you to believe.

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69 of 74 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Not just the best Rock and Roll documentary ever made... September 18, 2000
Format:VHS Tape
This movie has been almost universally acclaimed as the best Rock and Roll documentary ever, but that is damning with faint praise. This is a great movie, period.

It documents the Rolling Stones during their landmark '69 tour, and in particular, the documentary maker's dream (and everyone else's nightmare) Altamont concert. At the time, the Stones truly were "the greatest Rock and Roll band in the world", perhaps the greatest of all time. Jagger's performance and charisma are at their peak, no trace of the almost self-parody he would later embrace. Keith Richards' playing is rough, raunchy and powerful, while the unheralded Mick Taylor's exquisite blues guitar leads contrast by their beauty.

The performances alone (including Tina Turner doing "I've Been Loving You Too Long") would be enough to make this a must have film, but Altamont is what makes it a truly great film. When we get to the Altamont concert, it gradually becomes more and more terrifying, reminiscent of the slow build of "The Shining". At first, Jagger thinks he can control the situation with peace and love rhetoric, "Brothers and sisters. If we are all one then let's show it!" At the end, the once confident rock star is reduced to a scared little boy pleading, "I pray that it's alright. I pray that it's alright," right before a man is stabbed to death a few feet away from him.

Highlights (besides the Stones and Tina Turner performances): Jagger watching a tape of himself (obviously stoned) giving glib and charming answers to reporters, then turning away from the tape, and almost blushing, saying, "Rubbish." Mick and Keith grooving to a different version of Brown Sugar that has a country lead guitar part, 2 years before the song was released. During the Altamont concert, a Hell's Angel on the stage staring at Jagger for a long time with a look of intense disgust like, "Look at this little faggot!" The disillusioned masses leaving the next morning while the rawest, nastiest version of "Gimme Shelter" you've ever heard plays on the soundtrack.

When you watch the Altamont part of this movie, your shoulders and body will scrunch up as though you were at a truly scary horror movie. It is that visceral. It is emotionally draining, yet compelling, and the music is fantastic. I have it on VHS and I will get the DVD as soon as it comes out. You should own this movie.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Great period movie, great music!
The Stones are always great, and I especially loved the scenes of them in the studio as well as all the bonus material.
Published 1 month ago by Lynda Zacharias
3.0 out of 5 stars stines at the best, unfortunately movie production isn't
the stines with Hells Angels and the flower children get together for sex, drucks, beer -beer brawls and yes, poorly recorded music
Published 2 months ago by robert wisowaty
4.0 out of 5 stars it was good
the product was for a loved one he liked it and watched it immediately. it was fast and fairly priced not much more can be said
Published 2 months ago by Jenny Fletes
5.0 out of 5 stars Criterion dvd vs. blu
Friend introduced me to dvd, but wanted blu, so I bought blu for him and watched it before hand off (I then kept dvd). Read more
Published 3 months ago by Jrum C.
5.0 out of 5 stars we all need shelter
come in out of the rain spark up the fire place and relax brings me back to when the stones were really rolling
Published 3 months ago by Brian G. Hayes
5.0 out of 5 stars hard to watch
Quite a difference between the Rolling Stones of "Charle is My Darling" and "Gimmie Shelter". That whole Altamont show was a bad idea from the start.... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Donald P. Usborne
4.0 out of 5 stars Another Time Capsule Courtesy of the Stones
I am the Stones Authority. This is an interesting film. Well shot and produced from a production values point of view. Read more
Published 4 months ago by M. Hughes
5.0 out of 5 stars This documentary is the true representation of that era - The Rolling...
They were turbulent times indeed. Most people like too think of the 60s and early 70s as a time of free love and peace and that Woodstock symbolized what was going on. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Melissa Wood
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Stones Documentary!!!!
Any work involving the Rolling Stones is great. Gimme Shelter is the classic Rock Concert documentary. Woodstock west. Arrived on time and in perfect condition.
Published 6 months ago by ajp
5.0 out of 5 stars The Rolling Stones ~ GIMME SHELTER
As time goes by I realize what a strange era the late 1960's was. Woodstock was over and the nomadic hoards of rock and rollers had become very wild, restless and edgy. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Louis Welsh
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Janis Joplin at Altamont
Janis did not perform at Altamont. If you haven't found it yet, the version you seek is from the Monterey Pop Festival and is on her 18 Essential Songs disc and probably others.
Dec 11, 2009 by boboquisp |  See all 2 posts
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